| Literature DB >> 16436205 |
Kenneth Hensley1, Haitham Abdel-Moaty, Jerrod Hunter, Molina Mhatre, Shenyun Mou, Kim Nguyen, Tamara Potapova, Quentin N Pye, Min Qi, Heather Rice, Charles Stewart, Katharine Stroukoff, Melinda West.
Abstract
Detailed study of glial inflammation has been hindered by lack of cell culture systems that spontaneously demonstrate the "neuroinflammatory phenotype". Mice expressing a glycine --> alanine substitution in cytosolic Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase (G93A-SOD1) associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) demonstrate age-dependent neuroinflammation associated with broad-spectrum cytokine, eicosanoid and oxidant production. In order to more precisely study the cellular mechanisms underlying glial activation in the G93A-SOD1 mouse, primary astrocytes were cultured from 7 day mouse neonates. At this age, G93A-SOD1 mice demonstrated no in vivo hallmarks of neuroinflammation. Nonetheless astrocytes cultured from G93A-SOD1 (but not wild-type human SOD1-expressing) transgenic mouse pups demonstrated a significant elevation in either the basal or the tumor necrosis alpha (TNFalpha)-stimulated levels of proinflammatory eicosanoids prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and leukotriene B4 (LTB4); inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and *NO (indexed by nitrite release into the culture medium); and protein carbonyl products. Specific cytokine- and TNFalpha death-receptor-associated components were similarly upregulated in cultured G93A-SOD1 cells as assessed by multiprobe ribonuclease protection assays (RPAs) for their mRNA transcripts. Thus, endogenous glial expression of G93A-SOD1 produces a metastable condition in which glia are more prone to enter an activated neuroinflammatory state associated with broad-spectrum increased production of paracrine-acting substances. These findings support a role for active glial involvement in ALS and may provide a useful cell culture tool for the study of glial inflammation.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16436205 PMCID: PMC1360663 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-3-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Figure 1Representative multiprobe ribonuclease protection assay results indicating selective increase in certain cytokine mRNAs in G93A-SOD1 astrocyte cultures, either in the absence of deliberate stimulation (basal condition) or after 4 hours treatment with recombinant murine IFNγ (50 U/mL), TNFα (40 ng/mL) or both. Each lane represents pooled mRNA from at 6 wells of cells.
Cytokine and apoptosis-associated message levels in nontransgenic and G93A-SOD1 astrocyte cultures in the basal (unstimulated) condition and 4 hours following stimulation with 50 U/mL IFNγ, 20 ng/mL TNFα or a combination of both cytokines. Data represent pooled samples from 6 wells in a typical experiment (see Fig. 1). Band intensities were normalized to the sum of GAPDH + L32 message levels prior to comparison between genotypes.
| mRNA | Unstimulated G93A-SOD1 as % of unstimulated nonTg | Stimulated message level as % of unstimulated level, within genotypes | |||||
| NonTg stimulated with: | G93A-SOD1 stimulated with: | ||||||
| IFNγ | TNFα | IFNγ + TNFα | IFNγ | TNFα | IFNγ + TNFα | ||
| Caspase 8 | 237 | 108 | 98 | 108 | 181 | 177 | 233 |
| FADD | 168 | 90 | 114 | 126 | 106 | 114 | 100 |
| FAF | 94 | 94 | 87 | 70 | 101 | 100 | 92 |
| FAP | 129 | 136 | 103 | 151 | 149 | 128 | 220 |
| FAS | 145 | 186 | 622 | 757 | 868 | 777 | 1392 |
| IL1α | 329 | 136 | 252 | 103 | 100 | 203 | 110 |
| IL1β | 644 | 152 | 1740 | 1101 | 161 | 724 | 223 |
| IL1-RA | 147 | 157 | 114 | 159 | 180 | 163 | 373 |
| IL6 | 34 | 148 | 768 | 991 | 1461 | 1228 | 2755 |
| IL18 | 307 | 221 | 104 | 92 | 199 | 205 | 194 |
| IL12p35 | 341 | 141 | 239 | 263 | 108 | 71 | 103 |
| IL12p40 | 325 | 121 | 137 | 165 | 197 | 94 | 1402 |
| IFNγ | 158 | 121 | 480 | 798 | 534 | 605 | 1792 |
| MIF | 70 | 83 | 129 | 133 | 95 | 110 | 108 |
| RIP | 159 | 130 | 152 | 225 | 230 | 161 | 258 |
| TNFα | 428 | 700 | 512 | 1511 | 2302 | 1669 | 3352 |
| TNF-RI | 166 | 132 | 99 | 131 | 180 | 112 | 176 |
| TGFβ1 | 353 | 99 | 122 | 145 | 94 | 116 | 115 |
| TGFβ3 | 155 | 90 | 96 | 87 | 94 | 132 | 148 |
| TRADD | 182 | 111 | 101 | 125 | 125 | 105 | 115 |
| TRAIL | 284 | 300 | 458 | 749 | 1307 | 734 | 1644 |
Figure 2Comparison of basal and cytokine-stimulated PGE2 and LTB4 production by nontransgenic primary mouse astrocytes, G93A-SOD1 mouse astrocytes, or wild type human SOD1-expressing mouse astrocytes. Insets show western blot analysis of basal COX-II and 5-LOX protein expression. Data bars indicate mean ± SD of 6 wells of cells from a typical experiment. p < 0.05 overall by ANOVA; * indicates specific difference between nontransgenic and G93A-SOD1 cultures assessed by Bonferroni post-hoc tests.
Figure 3iNOS protein expression and NO2- formation in cultured nontransgenic or G93A-SOD1+ astrocytes in the basal state and after 48 hours stimulation with recombinant murine TNFα (40 ng/mL) plus IFNγ (50 U/mL). Bars represent mean ± SD from 6 wells of cells in a typical experiment; * p < 0.05 for stimulated G93A-SOD1+ cells relative to correspondingly treated nontransgenic cells, by two-tailed t-test.
Figure 4Basal and cytokine-stimulated protein carbonylation is increased in G93A-SOD1 astrocyte cultures. Cells were stimulated for 48 hours with 50 U/mL IFNγ plus 40 ng/mL TNFα, lysed in the presence or absence of biotin-LC-hydrazide (+ or - label as indicated), blotted onto a PVDF membrane and probed with streptavidin-conjugated horseradish peroxidase.